"But then you ask them, 'Are you integrating content across multiple platforms? Are you doing analytics to see how effective your community is? Are you using lists on Twitter or circles on Google+ to organize your groups?' And the answer is no," he says. "Social media is more than just having a Facebook or Twitter account, and that's what we're trying to teach them."

Last year, Newhouse became the first institution to partner with social media management company HootSuite, teaming up to pilot a new social media education and certification service called HootSuite University.

The program, which is also available to businesses and individuals, gives participants access to its HootSuite dashboard, video-based courses, 20 30-minute webinars that offer best practices and tips from industry brands, and, ultimately, a certification after users pass a series of exams. Once they do, they're also added to HootSuite's social media consultant directory.

Ward says that HootSuite's program, paired with Newhouse's curriculum, aims to prepare students to enter corporations where they'll be expected to be savvy about and innovative in the uses of social media for business-a subject that has been tricky for many educators to effectively teach.

"We knew about the statistics that said businesses are struggling with social, and we wanted to help fix that by bridging the gap between the future workforce and the employers," says Kirsten Bailey, director of HootSuite University.

"We started talking to professors about the challenges they were having when they were trying to teach social media and what they were using to educate students," she says.

Professors, they found, understood the need for social media education, but weren't comfortable teaching it because of how quickly it changes. They also had difficulties finding reliable resources because textbooks on the subject are quickly rendered obsolete.

Hootsuite University, Bailey says, relieves professors and business users from having to keep up with the constant changes to social media platforms. Instead, the program crowdsources information, best practices and tips from experts from the platforms themselves-Facebook, LinkedIn, YouTube, Tumblr and more-to help develop and update HootSuite University's courses.

"Social media came up so quickly and progressed so quickly it's hard for anyone to be an expert in it all," Ward says. "HootSuite's team of people keeps an eye on APIs and upgrades and makes sure we're always informed," Ward says.

The pilot program was so successful-with 80 percent of Newhouse students reporting it was "extremely helpful" in advancing their social media education and all reporting they feel better prepared to use social media professionally-that it has since been adopted by more than 80 colleges and universities worldwide, including the Columbia Journalism School, University of Washington and the University of Technology, Sydney.

"We talk about how digital and social are integrated into businesses' overall strategy; we talk about analytics and how to measure the effectiveness of our efforts," Ward says. "And just as much as it's external-facing, we also discuss how to use social within an organization to improve communication, because that's a skillset companies need."

And while the students complete the class and earn a certification that Ward hopes will help them land interviews, he says it's even more important for students to exhibit that they can execute with the new skills they've learned.

"Ultimately, what we want is for students to be comfortable with how quickly things change," Ward says. "We want them to look at these new tools as an adventure and not something stressful-that's what companies want. They want you to take the initiative and show that you can deliver on every part of social media."

While educators were the first to adopt the curriculum, HootSuite says it is seeing an increasing number of businesses signing on in an effort to educate their employees about social media and its business applications.

"There's an interest from companies to understand how to get the most out of the tools they use," HootSuite University's Bailey says. "We have clients from agencies, freelancers, SMBs and large businesses who are all interested in social media education."

Colleges and universities are also capitalizing on the trend: The UCLA Extension School offers a Marketing Certificate with a concentration in social media and web analytics, while the Harvard Extension School offers a similar program. Dozens of other colleges and universities are also following suit.

Those certifications, though, don't come cheap: They range in price from HootSuite University's $31 per month to nearly $5,000. This has Steven Levy, managing director at BluewaterLabs, a recruiting and consulting agency, skeptical about the rise of social media certifications.

"I liken [social media certifications] to a driver's license: You may have one, but that doesn't mean I want to get in a car with you," he says. "A certification could get you in the door, but it doesn't mean you can do the job."

"Digital literacy and social media etiquette shouldnt be for the select few in social media-businesses should be training employees," he says. "We want to make sure the students can fly the plane and by the end of it, the certificate means something because they can effectively contribute to a business."